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realizing success

What leads to successful performance? If we are to believe business best sellers and management gurus, high performance can be achieved by following this or that formula – these six steps, those four principles, these seven immutable laws. While appealing, all this really does is cause us to follow one fad after another and divert our attention from a more powerful insight – at its core, performance retains a large measure of uncertainty.realizing success

Against this backdrop of uncertainty, research and experience suggests that when we strip away all of the hype and pretension surrounding this or that idea, in the final analysis organizational performance is driven by two things – strategy and execution. Simple enough in concept, much more challenging in practice.

Making Decisions that Matter: The Essence of Strategy

Strategy is about defining an organization’s identity (who are we, what do we do, what makes us different) and direction (where we are headed, how we’re going to get there, how we will know we’ve arrived). At its heart, strategy is all about making choices – focusing the energies and efforts of the entire organization on those critical decisions and courses of action that have the greatest chance of raising the organization’s chances of success in the face of an uncertain future.

Strategy is not about creating a list of vague aspirational statements. “Achieving customer delight?” “Enhancing efficiency and effectiveness!” “Unlocking shareholder value!” It is not about long-winded mission and vision statements, and pages and pages of plans and documents. It is about answering some fundamental questions: In what combinations of products, services, and markets are we going to compete? What activities will we perform, and what will we leave to suppliers, subcontractors, or other partners? How will we differentiate ourselves from our competitors?

Making choices and formulating strategy involves risk and takes courage. It involves a sober assessment of external forces and a realistic evaluation of internal capabilities, resources, and resolve. It requires an understanding of the implications of different courses of action and insight into what it will take to turn strategy into action. Unfortunately, far too many organizations spend their time building plans versus making decisions.

At the end of the day, it is intelligent choices, well executed, that will help you ‘win the game’.

Aligning Leadership Behaviour: The Key to Successful Execution

If strategy is about making deliberate choices, execution is all about carrying out those choices with intention and integrity. It’s about the way people, working together in an organization, mobilize resources to deliver on the strategy and drive results.

aligning leadership behaviourSenior leaders play a crucial role in executing strategy. Research has shown that top executives have considerable influence over the form and fate of their organizations – more than we sometimes care to admit. As such, the way leaders “show up” with each other and the rest of the organization makes a big difference to successful strategy implementation. Leaders must ensure that their behaviours are aligned with the strategy and tailored to the needs of the organization.

During times of change and uncertainty, clarity regarding the leadership behaviour required to support business strategy is all the more important. There isn’t the luxury of anticipating that individuals and teams will intuitively ‘figure out’ what’s required of them to drive expected results.

While some leadership behaviours, like a bias for action, are generic and key to the successful execution of any strategy, other required behaviours are unique. In other words, different strategies require different behaviours from leaders. Unfortunately, few executives and their teams take the time to consider the leadership implications of their strategic choices. This includes defining the behaviours needed to drive the organization forward and regularly assessing their progress and performance. Without clear alignment between business strategy and leadership behaviour, implementation will falter and performance will suffer.

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